The long-suffering Miami Heat completed a remarkable turnaround
by beating the Dallas Mavericks 95-92 on Tuesday to win the NBA
Finals 4-2 and claim their first championship.
Finals MVP Dwyane Wade scored 36 points to lead the Heat, a team
of veterans who recovered from a 0-2 deficit to sweep the next four
games against a Dallas squad whose confidence evaporated further
with each loss.
Udonis Haslem hit eight of 13 shots to add 17 points for the
Heat, who won despite hitting just two of 18 from beyond the
arc.
"We knew inside this team was built for the playoffs," Wade said
of Miami's unremarkable 52-30 regular season record. "That's what
makes it sweet because not at one moment did one of us not believe
in each other."
Dirk Nowitzki paced Dallas with 29 points and 15 rebounds but
the Mavericks were doomed by shooting only 37 percent from the
floor and hitting just five of 22 from three-point range.
A 17-foot jump shot by Josh Howard with 42 seconds left in the
game pulled the Mavericks to within a point at 91-90, but Wade hit
four straight free throws to push the Heat lead to 95-90 with 17.7
seconds remaining.
Two free throws by Howard trimmed the lead to 95-92 before two
missed free throws by Wade with 10.3 seconds remaining gave Dallas
its last ray of hope.
But a potentially game-tying 27-footer by guard Jason Terry
misfired, giving the Heat their first title and igniting a midcourt
celebration.
The championship was Pat Riley's fifth as a coach but first
since 1988.
"I would have traded them all for this one," said a tearful
Riley, whose previous titles came with the Los Angeles Lakers.
"It's not disrespectful to any of them that I won.
"But after 18 years, and chasing, you keep chasing it, you keep
chasing it, you get tired. So this gives me a sense of absolute
freedom from having to chase it, desperately chase it."
The 18-year-old Heat franchise has often had outstanding records
during the regular season but fallen flat in the postseason either
due to poor play or running into title-bound teams like the Michael
Jordan-led Chicago Bulls of the 1990s.
Dallas crushed Miami in the first two games of the Finals in
Texas and it appeared the Heat were poised for a typical postseason
collapse.
But they caught fire and gained confidence in Miami, winning all
three games inspired by the stellar play of Wade who averaged 40
points.
"I think what changed is everybody was counting us out," said
Heat center Shaquille O'Neal, who scored nine points and had 12
rebounds in the series finale. "Certain people up here were
planning parade routes.
"When we saw that -- that they didn't give us the respect we
deserved -- we just wanted to take it one game at a time."
The Mavericks had no answer to Wade, who hit 10 of 18 shots and
16 of 21 from the free-throw line on Tuesday.
"Some of that stuff, you just can't teach," Dallas coach Avery
Johnson said of Wade's offense. "When a player is making those kind
of plays it's really no tricky play.
"He's beating double-teams, he's beating triple teams. There's
no tricks there. It's a straight isolation play."
BOISTEROUS CROWD
Dallas opened the game with renewed vigor following their
collapse in Miami, using a 16-4 first quarter run to assume a 26-12
lead and get the boisterous crowd of 20,000 on its feet.
Wade, however, started to find his range midway through the
second quarter to key an 18-4 streak and give Miami a 49-46 lead
just before intermission.
A lay-up by Nowitzki with a second remaining in the opening half
trimmed Miami's lead to 49-48 but the Heat's confidence began to
grow on a court on which they had not won since 2002.
Wade had 12 of his 19 halftime points in the second quarter,
often duelling Nowitzki basket-for-basket. Nowitzki, looking to
regain his scoring touch that had evaporated in Miami, had 17
points by halftime on eight of 12 shooting.
Miami threatened to blow the game open when a jam by Alonzo
Mourning gave the Heat a 68-59 lead with just under two minutes
left in the third quarter.
But guard Marquis Daniels scored six points during a 9-3 Dallas
spurt to close the quarter and cut the Mavericks' deficit to 71-68
entering the final 12 minutes.
"We had our chances time and time again," Terry said. "It's
going to eat at us. It just wasn't our time."
(AP via China Daily June 21, 2006)